The
Kodak Professional 1400 Digital Photo Printer is an affordable 8 x 10-inch,
color printer that's perfect for advanced
amateurs, professional users and small labs. Priced at $499, the
Kodak 1400 is the least expensive of Kodak's professional grade printers and within
the budget of us "normal" folks. The Kodak 1400 produces consistent results using
dry imaging technology so there's no worries of clogged heads or spilled ink.

Whether in a studio or on location for proofing or at home for final printing and
displaying, the robust desktop printer produces one 8x12, one 8x10, two 6x8, two5x7
or four 4x6-inch photos per sheet, and the water-resistant photos last a lifetime.
The Kodak Professional paper and ribbon consumables are bundled in matched volumes to
provide optimum color density for every print, eliminating worries associated with
low ink levels. Consumables—including paper available in 50- and 25-sheet packs—are
priced competitively to similar offerings on the market.

Kodak Professional 1400 features include:

90 seconds per print

Gloss and matte finish output available for professional portrait applications

Mechanics

The dry film ribbon is installed in a carrier, which is inserted into the top of the
printer. No threading is required. The paper is installed into a universal paper
tray, which is inserted into the front of the machine.

Setup is simple: Press the big button to open the top, insert the ink ribbon
cartridge, close top, load paper in the tray, insert paper tray into front of
printer, attach the rear dust cover, connect power cord, plug in the USB cable
to the computer, load the software and away you go!

Printers controls are few as the printer is controlled from the host
computer via the software driver. There are indicator lights on top for Power,
Media (paper in tray) and Error. The large button opens the top for changing ribbons or
cleaning the print head assembly. The smaller button is for canceling a print job.
Shown below is the rear-mounted Power button.

The Kodak 1400 has a single, high-speed USB 2.0 interface connector on the back that
is compatible with both PC and Mac computers. As with almost all printers sold
today, it does not come with a USB cable. Driver software and Kodak EasyShare
software is included for both operating systems.

Kodak 1400 Consumables

With the Kodak 1400, photographers get the same number
of prints from a print kit, which bundles the ribbon cartridge and a
50- or 25-sheet EKTATHERM paper pack. Because the media and ribbon are
color-matched, users can anticipate consistent print quality from their first print
to the last. In addition, the coated paper stock is water-resistant from the moment
it leaves the printer; no drying time is required.

Earlier Kodak thermal printers limited the single sheet size to 8.5 x 12 inches. By
switching to a larger, universal paper tray for the 1400, photographers can print
from either 12 or 14-inch media, consistent with the A4 size used internationally.
Users can print four 4 x 6-inch prints per sheet, a true A4 image, or two 6 x 8-inch
prints - the size offered in some wedding album formats.

The "street price" for these Print Kits is around $50 for the glossy or matte
25-sheet print packs, $90 for 50-sheet and $316 for a case (4 kits). So the cost
per print excluding the
price of the printer is as low as $1.58 per sheet.

CAT No.

KODAK PROFESSIONALEKTATHERM 1400 Print Kit

SheetsPer Kit

Photos Per Kit

8 x 12

8 x 10

6 x 8

5 x 7

4 x 6

885 6841

Glossy / 8.5x14-25 Pack

25

25

25

50

50

100

884 7527

Glossy / 8.5x14-50 Pack

50

50

50

100

100

200

817 2041

Glossy / 8.5x12-25 Pack

25

N/A

25

25

50

75

166 6031

Glossy / 8.5x12-50 Pack

50

N/A

50

50

100

150

895 7185

Matte / 8.5x12 -50 Pack

50

N/A

50

50

100

150

860 2898

Glossy / A4 -50 Pack

50

N/A

50

50

100

150

833 5788

Matte / A4 -50 Pack

50

N/A

50

50

100

150

Driver Software

Driver software is supplied for Windows ME, 2000, and XP
and Macintosh OS 10.X including Tiger. Shown here are the Windows XP screens:

If you've used an inkjet photo printer then I'm sure
that you've been overwhelmed by the driver software choices. The Kodak 1400 like
most dye-sub printers has a relatively simple set of driver options. If you use the
same ribbon type then you probably won't even need to go into the driver.

The first page of driver options lets you specify the paper size, ribbon type and
whether or not to apply the Xtralife coating. Beats me why anyone would choose not
to apply the Xtralife coating, this is the UV resistant coating that makes the print
last like a real photograph. If you select the matte ribbon you can also vary the
"effect" with the slider control. Other options are for paper orientation, rotation
and mirroring, number of copies and scaling percentage. The image sharpness is
settable for High, Normal or Off.

The second page of driver settings let you "fine tune" the color, gamma, contrast
and brightness. For many users these can all be left at the default "0" settings.

Kodak includes a Calibration Utility with the printer that allows you to visually
calibrate the color output by printing a test sheet with numerous gray target squares
to compare. I found no need to fiddle with it as the printer was totally color
correct right
out of the box.

Also included in the software bundle is Kodak EasyShare 4.0 for Windows or Mac OS X including
Tiger. EASYSHARE Software gives you full control of your digital pictures. It makes
organizing, printing, sharing, and enhancing pictures simple and fun.
It also allows you to organize multiple images for printing on a single sheet.

Steve's Conclusion

It's been almost three years since we reviewed the
Kodak Professional 8500 printer and given the time and competition from the
Olympus
P-440, the price has dropped from $999 to an affordable $499.
Both printers will make an 8x10-inch print for less than $2, the P-440 is around
$1.86 and the Kodak 1400 is about $1.58. The P-440 is limited to a maximum size
of 8x10-inches whereas the Kodak 1400 can print up to 8x12-inches
but lacks the P-440's standalone printing capability. The Kodak 1400 cranks out a
print in less than 90 seconds, the P-440 is a little faster at 75 seconds. Both printers are
dye diffusion thermal transfer process type and will make professional quality prints
with the same permanence of traditional, wet-processed photo prints.

The Kodak 1400 is fairly large, measuring 9.4" x 30" x 17" (HxDxW) including the front
paper tray and the rear dust cover. There's no worry of it sliding off your table,
it weighs in at about 28 pounds and doesn't even shake when printing. As with
all dye-sub printers, the Kodak 1400 runs the paper in and out four times during the
printing process. The first three passes apply the color dyes and the fourth pass is
when the ExtraLife coating (glossy or matte) is applied. Because of all of the
mechanical paper transporting, the thermal head and cooling fan, the printer is
far from quiet, Kodak rates it at <60dB.

8x12" print showing the unprintable border areas (Photo credit NASA)

The only drawback to these types of printers is that they are page printers, you
can't print out just a 4x6-inch print, you must print an entire 8x12" or 8x14"
sheet. Using the supplied software you can place four 4x6-inch prints per sheet
though. And no matter what size print you make you'll need to do some trimming
as there is an unprintable area on both ends of the sheet. This is best done with
a rotary photo trimmer that is specially designed to make very clean cuts on photo
media. If you need a borderless print then you'll be trimming all four sides of the
picture. Most photographers that do their own printing already have a good
trimmer, if
not then you need to figure it into the purchase price - it's a required item.

If you have a studio portrait business or you photograph weddings then I believe that
this is what you're looking for in a cost-effective printer. It's fast and very
consistent, the latter being more important than the first to most pros. Inkjet
printers are OK for quick prints or proofs - when you're ready to
step up to a "real" printer there's no alternative to a dye sub - unless of course
you have a spare $25 grand for a Fuji Pictography! The Kodak 1400 is
a great choice for anyone that seeks digital prints with the permanence of
silver halide prints. With a price of around $500, it's very affordable and
it says "Kodak Professional Paper" on the back of every print...